The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of Coffee Consumption
By Heidi Whitaker
Coffee is heavily studied, but study results contradict one another. If
science says that it is bad for you today, wait a day or two and another study
will be published claiming the exact opposite findings.
The Good:
Coffee has had its medicinal purposes. My own ancestors used it to treat
asthma. Certain chemicals in coffee have even be proven effective at stimulating
bronchial dilation of people previously diagnosed with specific types of asthma.
Some modern day asthma medications are even made from chemicals in the caffeine
family.
Newly published findings suggest that men drinking caffeinated beverages,
including coffee, have as much as a 3 to 6 times lower risk of developing
Parkinson's disease.
The caffeine in coffee increases your metabolic rate, making weight loss
faster and easier. It has also been associated with a reduced risk of suicide in
women.
The Bad:
Women who drink more than one cup a day of decaf are considered at a much
higher risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis. The theory is that the
chemically decaffeinated products are causing the increased risk of
autoimmunity. If you are going to drink decaffeinated coffee anyway, be sure
that it uses a non-chemical based method.
Those at risk of heart disease and stroke should avoid coffee. Drinking
coffee interferes with your body's ability to keep homocysteine and cholesterol
levels in check and can increase blood pressure. (According to a study done in
the Netherlands, this is true even if the coffee is filtered.) Raised levels of
homocysteine are as a factor in the development of cardiovascular disease.
Australian researchers found drinking coffee has potentially harmful effects on
blood vessels. The caffeine may cause a loss of aortic elasticity, the main
artery supplying blood to the body.
The findings are disputed by the coffee industry and some studies, but it
also appears to be associated with an increased risk for breast and endometrial
cancer. This is due to an increase in estrogen levels.
Studies have also shown that caffeine in coffee can raise levels of stress
hormones and can lead to heart palpitations, jitters, and nervousness. People
with panic or anxiety disorders can be especially sensitive to the caffeine in
coffee. Even in small amounts, the stimulant can exacerbate their symptoms.
Coffee relaxes the esophagus causing reflux.
The Ugly:
Pregnant and nursing women should never drink coffee. Caffeine is a stimulant
drug that easily passes through the placenta to the developing fetus and is also
transferred through breast milk. Fetuses have no ability to detoxify caffeine.
Drink coffee increases the risk of miscarriage and various birth defects.
For more information, visit the following:
How Bad is it Really? http://www.mercola.com/2003/dec/10/coffee.htm
Coffee Drinkers Face Lower Parkinson's Disease Risk
http://www.mercola.com/2000/may/28/coffee_parkinson.htm
Coffee May Damage Blood Vessels
http://www.mercola.com/2000/sep/17/coffee_blood_vessels.htm
Coffee and Suicide http://www.cnn.com/HEALTH/9603/coffee_suicide/
Coffee and Diabetes http://www.thefactsaboutfitness.com/news/coff_diab.htm
Coffee and Reflux http://www.s-t.com/daily/03-97/03-11-97/b01ho075.htm
Coffee and Addiction
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=C1VYBJVSS04E2CRBAEZSFFA?type=healthNews&storyID=6369844
Heidi Whitaker is an author and speaker on the topic of nutritional support
of autoimmune disease. She is also the co-owner of
http://www.healthydivas.com.
To read other articles written by Heidi or to learn how to participate in her
next free teleseminar, visit her blog at
http://autoimmune.myblogsite.com/blog.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/